Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BRITISH INDIA STEAM NAVIGATION CO., LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHANMUGHAVILAS CASHEW INDUSTRIES AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT13/03/1990
BENCH:
SAIKIA, K.N. (J)
BENCH:
SAIKIA, K.N. (J)
SAWANT, P.B.
CITATION:
1990 SCR (1) 884 1990 SCC (3) 481
JT 1990 (1) 528 1990 SCALE (1)462
ACT:
Indian Bill of Lading Act, 1856: Bill of Lading--Negoti-
ation of Contract of affreightment need not be expressed in
writing; agreed jurisdiction of a court and choice of law
binding on the parties; no submission to the jurisdiction of
another court if appearance only to protest.
The Indian Carriage of Goods by Sea Act, 1925 Contract
of affreightment--’ Voyage charterparty’ ’time charterpar-
ty’; responsibility of the charterer vis-a-vis the owner to
be ascertained from the charterparty and the bill of lading.
HEADNOTE:
The first respondent, M/s Shanmughavilas Cashew Indus-
tries, shipped 4445 bags of raw cashewnuts from East Africa
to Cochin in the vessel Steliosm chartered by the appellant
M/s British India Steam Navigation Co. Ltd., incorporated in
England, pursuant to a contract of affreightment evidenced
by three bills of lading. But only 3712 bags were delivered
at Cochin, there being thus short landing of 733 bags.
The first respondent sued the appellant in the Court of
the Subordinate Judge, Cochin, seeking damages. The Subordi-
nate Judge decreed the suit with interest. The appellant’s
appeal to the High Court failed.
In the courts below the main contentions of the appel-
lant were that it was a mere charterer of the vessel; that
there was a charterpar? executed between the first respond-
ent and the agent of the owner in London; that as per clause
3 of the bill of lading the Court at Cochin had no jurisdic-
tion and only English Courts had jurisdiction; and that as
per the charterparty and clause 4 of the bill of lading the
remedy of the first respondent, if any, was against the’
owner who alone was liable and not against the appellant
charterer of the vessel.
The first respondent had denied that the appellant was
only a charterer and not liable for the shortage. It had
also denied that only English Courts had jurisdiction in the
matter.
885
Before this Court, on behalf of the appellant it was
submitted that the appellant was an English company regis-
tered in England carrying on business in England, and it did
not carry on any business in India; as the carrier under
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clause 3 of the bill of lading, only the appellant had an
option either to sue or be sued in England, or in Cochin,
which was a port of destination, but the shipper had no
option to sue at Cochin; in its written statement it was
clearly stated that it had appeared under protest and with-
out prejudice to the contention regarding jurisdiction which
contention it had also pressed at the time of the argument,
and, therefore, it could not be said to have submitted to
the jurisdiction of Cochin court as it never made any sub-
mission or raised any objection as to the fact of short
landing; and that the High Court has held clause 3 of the
bill of lading to be bad on two erroneous grounds, namely,
that it offends section 28 of the Contract Act and that it
gives an unfair advantage to the carrier which advantage is
not given to the consignee.
Allowing the appeal and remanding the case to the trial
Court it was,
HELD: (1) A bill of lading is the symbol of the goods,
and the right to possess these passes to the transferee of
the bill of lading, and the right to sue passes with it.
]893C]
Sewell v. Burdick, [1884] 10 App. Cases 74 (85, 104), re-
ferred to.
(2) A bill of lading is intended to provide for the
rights and liabilities of the parties arising out of the
contract of affreightment. If a consignee claims the goods
under a bill of lading, he is bound by its terms. [904C]
(3) The property in the cargo passes to the consignee or
the endorsee of the bill of lading but the contract whereun-
der the consignment or endorsement is made has always to be
taken into consideration. Thus the consignee or endorsee
gets only such rights as its consignor or endorser had in
respect of the goods mentioned in the bill of lading.
[904C-D]
(4) The jurisdiction of the Court may be decided upon
the parties themselves on the basis of various connecting
factors, and the parties should be bound by the jurisdiction
clause to which they have agreed unless there is some strong
reason to the contrary. [897B; 899F]
(5) The first respondent is the consignee and holder of the
bills of
886
lading and ex facie should be bound by clause 3 thereof in
regard to jurisdiction. 1892A]
(6) If clause 3 of the bills of lading is held to be
binding on the first respondent the choice of law by the
parties would also be binding. [892C]
(7) In the event of the English Court alone having the
jurisdic-
ion, the application of Indian statutes and the jurisdiction
of the Indian court would be, to that extent, inapplicable.
[892D]
(8) There may, however, be submission to the jurisdic-
tion of an Indian Court by litigating in India. [896E]
Sirdar Gurdyal Singh v. Rajah of Faridkote, [1894] AC
670 (684), referred to.
(9) The question of jurisdiction in this case ought not
to have been determined by the High Court on the basis of
the provisions of section 28 of the Indian Contract Act in
the absence of a specific provision making it applicable
to transactions in international trade. [895F]
(10) Where the negotiation of a bill of lading is by the
person who had a right to sue on it, mere possession of it
does not enable the holder to sue any person who was not
liable under it and not to sue another who was liable under
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it, to make good the claim. He cannot also sue at a place
not intended by the parties when intention has been ex-
pressed. [893E-F]
(11) Although a defendant who appears and contests the case
on its merits will be held to have submitted to the juris-
diction, an appearance merely to protest that the court does
not have jurisdiction will not constitute submission, even
if the defendant also seeks stay of proceedings pending the
outcome of proceedings abroad. [896F-G]
Williams & Glyn’s Bank PLC v. Astro Dinamico Compania Navi-
era S.A. & Anr. The Weekly Law Reports Vol. (1) 1984-438 and
Rein v. Stain, [1892] 66 LT 469, referred to.
(12) In the instant case, in the Memo. of appeal before
the lower appellate court no specific ground as to jurisdic-
tion was taken though there were grounds on non-maintain-
ability of the suit. Even in the Special Leave Petition
before this Court no ground of lack of jurisdiction of the
courts below has been taken. The appellant has, therefore,
to be
887
held to have either waived the objection as to jurisdiction
or to have submitted to the jurisdiction, in the facts and
circumstances of the case. The defence that the suit was not
maintainable in the absence of the owner of the ship could
in a sense be said to have been on the merits of the case.
[899B-C]
13) Clause 3 of the bills of lading also contains the
selection of law made by the parties. The contract is gov-
erned by English law and disputes are to be determined
according to English Law. [8991]
(14) As the law has been chosen, the proper law will be
the domestic law of England and the proper law must be the
law at the time when the contract is made, throughout the
life of the contract, and there cannot be a "floating"
proper law. [900D]
Gienar v. Meyer, [1796] 2 Hy BI 603; Rex v. Internation-
al Trustee for the Protection of Bondholders AG, [1937] AG
500 (529); Vita Food Products Inc. v. Unus Shipping Co.
Ltd., [1939] AC 277 (289-90); James Miller & Partners Ltd.
v. Whirworth Street Estates (Manchester) Ltd., [1970] AC 583
(603); Mackendar v. Feldia AG, [1966] 3 All E.R. 847; Com-
pagnie d’Armement Maritime SA v. Compagnie Tunisienne de
Navigation SA, [1971] AC 572: [1970] 3 All E.R. 71 and Acrow
(Automation) Ltd. v. Rex Chainbelt Inc., [1971] 3 All E.R.
1175, referred to.
(15) The bill of lading is not the contract of af-
freightment, for that has been made before the bill of
lading was signed and delivered, but it evidences the terms
of that contract. [901B]
(16) If certain clauses of the charterparty are referred
to in the bill of lading those should be referred to in
specific terms so as to bind the shipper and the consignee.
A general reference may not be sufficient under all circum-
stances. [902E]
T.W. Thomas & Co. Ltd. v. Portsea Steamship Co. Ltd.,
[1912] AC 1; Vita Food Products, Incorporated v. Unus Ship-
ping Co. Ltd., [1939] AC 277 and Rex. v. International
Trustee for the Protection of Bondholders, [1937] AC 500,
referred to.
(17) For the purpose of ascertaining the responsibility
of a charterer in respect of the cargo shipped and landed,
it would be necessary to know not only the stipulations
between the shipper i.e. the owner of the cargo and the
charterer evidenced by the bill of lading, but
888
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also those between the charterer and the owner of the ship.
If the charter is by way of demise the problem would be
simple inasmuch as the bill of lading will be purely between
the shipper and the charterer. In cases of a ’voyage char-
ter’ or a ’time charter’ one has to find out the actual
terms of the charter to ascertain whether they operated as
charter by demise or made the charterer only as an agent of
the ship owner, and if so to what extent so as to ascertain
the extent of privity established between the shipper and
the ship owner as stipulated in the bill of lading. [905G-H;
906A]
(18) Whether a charterparty operates as a demise or not
depends on the stipulations of the charterparty. The princi-
pal test is whether the master is the employee of the owner
or of the charterer. [906G]
(19) It cannot be said that the bill of lading is not
conclusive evidence of its terms and the person executing it
is not necessarily bound by all its stipulations, unless he
repudiates them on the ground that, as he did not know, and
could not reasonably be expected to know, of their exist-
ence, his assent to them is not to be inferred from his
acceptance of the bill of lading without objection. [907D]
(20) Where there is a charterparty, the bill of lading
is prima facie, as between the ship owner and an indorsee,
the contract on which the goods are carried. This is so when
the indorsee is ignorant of the terms of the charterparty,
and may be so even if he knows of them. As between the ship
owner and the charterer the bill of lading may in some cases
have the effect of modifying the contract as contained in
the charterparty, although, in general, the charterparty
will prevail and the bill of lading will operate solely as
an acknowledgement of receipt. [907E-F]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 764 (N)
of 1975.
From the Judgment and Decree dated 30.11.1973 of the
Kerala High Court in A.S. No. 365 of 1969.
R.F. Nariman, Mrs. A.K. Verma and D.N. Mishra for the
Appellant.
Ramamurthi (Not Present) for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
889
K.N. SAIKIA, J. The first respondent M/s. Shanmughavilas
Cashew Industries, QuiIon purchased from East Africa 350
tons of raw cashewnuts which were shipped in the vessel SS
Steliosm chartered by the appellant M/s. British India Steam
Navigation Co. Ltd., incorporated in England, pursuant to a
contract of affreightment evidenced by 3 bills of lading
issued to the shipper for the 3 loads of cashewnuts. Out of
4445 bags containing the nuts carried in the said vessel
only 37 12 bags were delivered at Cochin, there being thus
short landing of 733 bags.
The first respondent sued the appellant in suit No. O.S.
18/1965 in the Court of the Subordinate Judge, Cochin seek-
ing damages for the shortage of 733 bags of raw cashewnuts
amounting to Rs.44,438.03. The suit having been decreed with
interest @ 6% per annum from 17.7. 1964, for the sum total
of Rs.46,659.93, the appellant preferred therefrom appeal
A.S. No. 365 of 1969 in the High Court of Kerala which was
pleased by its Judgments and decree dated 16.8. 1973 and
30.11. 1973, to dismiss the appeal and affirm that of the
Subordinate Judge. Aggrieved, the appellant has preferred
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this appeal by special leave.
In the courts below the main contentions of the appel-
lant, inter alia, were that it was a mere chatterer of the
vessel which was owned by S. Matas & Compnay c/o Lucas Matas
& Sons, Piraeus, Greece; that there was a charterparty
executed between the first respondent and M/s. Victorial
Steamship Company as agents of the said owner of the vessel
in London on 27.1. 1964; that as per clause 3 of the bill of
lading the court at Cochin had no jurisdiction and only
English courts had jurisdiction; and that as per the char-
terparty and clause 4 of the bill of lading the reined.? of
the first respondent, if any, was against the owner who
alone was liable and not against the appellant charterer of
the vessel. Exhibit D 1 is the photostate copy of the char-
terparty concluded in London on 27.1. 1964 and Exhibit P 1
to P3 are the 3 bills of lading in the transaction. The
first respondent denied that the appellant was only a char-
terer and not liable for the shortage. It also denied that
only English Courts had jurisdiction in the matter.
Mr. R.F. Nariman the learned counsel for the appellant
first submits that the appellant is an English company
registered in England carrying on business in England, and
it does not carry on any business in India. It is submitted,
as the carrier under clause 3 of the bill of lading, only
the appellant has an option either to sue or be sued in
England, or in Cochin, which is a port of destination but
the shipper
890
had no option to sue at Cochin. In its written statement it
was clearly stated that it had appeared under protest and
without prejudice to the contention regarding jurisdiction
which contention it had also pressed at the time of the
argument, and, therefore, it could not be said to have
submitted to the jurisdiction of Cochin court; and it never
made any submission or raised any objection as to the fact
of short landing. According to counsel the High Court has
held clause 3 of the bill of lading to be bad on two errone-
ous grounds, namely, that it offends section 28 of the
Contract Act and that it gives an unfair advantage to the
carrier which advantage is not given to the consignee.
Section 28, according to counsel, is not applicable and
clause 3 was not bad on the ground of having given an unfair
advantage to the carrier in giving him the option to sue or
be sued either in England or at the port of destination and
that even if it was bad, only the offending portion could be
struck off, the rest of the clause would still be applicable
and only the English court would have jurisdiction.
Records show that in the written statement the appellant
as defendant in para B stated that the contract evidenced by
the bills of lading was governed by English law and the
parties had agreed that the disputes were to be determined
in England according to English law to the exclusion of the
jurisdiction of the courts of any other country and that the
institution of the suit at Cochin was in violation of that
agreement, and hence the Court had no jurisdiction to try
the suit and the plaint should be returned for presentation
to proper court.
In the Replication filed by the plaintiff it was said:
"The objection regarding jurisdiction raised in clause B of
written statement is not tenable. The cause of action for
the suit has arisen within the local limits of the jurisdic-
tion of this Court. The defendant is also residing and
carrying on business within this court’s jurisdiction. It is
now well settled that the parties cannot be consent confer
or oust the jurisdiction of a Court. The plaintiffs deny the
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agreement mentioned in clause B and no agreement can oust
the jurisdiction of the Court when the Court possesses the
jurisdiction."
Issue No. 1 was: "Whether the suit is properly filed in
this Court?" The trial court in its judgment dated 29.3.
1968 held:
"This issue has been considered by this Court on 28.2. 1966
891
and it has been found that this Court has jurisdiction
to try the suit. The said finding has been confirmed by the
Hon’ble High Court on 6.4.1967 in C.R.P. 977/66."
That judgment is not before us. In the memo of appeal to the
High Court apart from the general grounds that the judgment
and decree of the Court below were wrong in law and fact;
that the Court below should have held that the suit was not
maintainable in law and should have finally dismissed the
suit as the owners of the vessel ’Steliosm’ a necessary
party, as he alone was liable, was not impleaded and pro-
ceeded against, no specific ground about jurisdiction was
taken and consequently we do not find any direct discussion
on the point in the High Court judgments.
Even so, this being a question of jurisdiction going to
the root of the matter we allowed the appellant to make his
submissions. The appellant’s submission that the courts at
Cochin had no jurisdiction is based on clause 3 of the Bills
of Lading which reads as follows:
"3. JURISDICTION: The contract evidence by this bill of
lading shall be governed by English law and disputes deter-
mined in England or, at the option of the Carrier, at the
port of destination according to English law to the exclu-
sion of the jurisdiction of the Courts of any other
country."
If the above clause was binding on the first respondent,
without anything more, there could be no doubt that the suit
claim arising out of the contract of affreightment evidenced
by the bills of lading will have to be determined in England
or, at the option of the carrier, that is the appellant, at
the port of destination, that is, Cochin, to the exclusion
of the jurisdiction of the courts of any other country. Is
the first respondent bound by this clause of the Bill of
Lading?
Clause 29 of both the bills of lading Exhibit P 1 and P2
runs as follows:
"Finally in Accepting This Bill of lading. The shipper,
Consignee, and Owner of the goods, and the Holders of this
Bill of Lading, expressly accept and agree to all its stipu-
lations, exceptions, and conditions whether written, print-
ed, stamped or incorporated, as fully as if they were all
signed by such Shipper, Consignee, Owner or Holder."
892
The first respondent is the consignee and holder of the
bills of lading and ex facie should be bound by this clause.
No doubt the bills of lading were issued to the shipper from
whom it was received by the first respondent. There is no
evidence to show that the shipper has repudiated the stipu-
lations in the bills of lading in any manner. Under these
circumstances would it be open to the first respondent to
repudiate clause 3 of the bills of lading?
It is a settled principle of Private International Law
governing bills of lading that the consignee or an endorsee
thereof derives the same rights and title in respect of the
goods covered by the bill of lading as the shipper thereof
had. For the purpose of jurisdiction the action of the first
respondent is an action in personam in Private International
Law. An action in personam is an action brought against a
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person to compel him to do a particular thing. If clause 3
of the bills of lading is held to be binding on the first
respondent the choice of law by the parties would also be
binding. English courts would perhaps use their own Private
International Law to decide the dispute. In the event of the
English Court alone having the jurisdiction, the application
of Indian statutes and the jurisdiction of the Indian courts
would be, to that extent, inapplicable.
Until the Bills of Lading Act, 1855 was passed in Eng-
land the endorsement of a Bill of Lading would not affect
the contract evidenced in it, and the endorsee could not sue
or be sued on such contract, though he was the person really
interested in goods, the subject of the contract. By section
1 of the Bills of Lading Act, 1855, in England "every con-
signee of goods named in a Bill of Lading, and every endor-
see of a Bill of Lading to whom the property of goods shall
pass, upon or by reason of such consignment or endorsement
shall have transferred to and vested in him all rights of
suit and be subject to the same liabilities in respect of
such goods as if the contract contained in the Bills of
Lading had been made with himself." In Sewell v. Burdick,
[1884] 10 App. Cas. 74 (85, 104) it is held that section 1
is to be given effect in any proceeding in the English Court
regardless of the proper law governing the transfer of the
bill of lading. The property passes by reason of consignment
or endorsement and the right to sue passes with it. The
consignee or endorsee may lose his right or liability under
the Act by such further endorsement of the bill of lading as
divests him of the property. Such a vesting of rights and
liabilities on endorsement of a bill of lading does not in
any way affect the shipowners’ rights against the original
shippers or owners of the goods for the freight or the
shipper’s rights under the bill of fading or the liability
893
Of the consignee or indorsee by reason of his being such
consignee or indorsee or of his receiving the goods in
consequence of such consignment or endorsement, or any right
of stoppage in transit.
The Indian Bill of Lading Act, 1856 was based on the
English Bills of Lading Act, 1855 (18 and 19 Vict. C. 111)
(Act IX of 1856). Under section 1 of the Indian Bills of
Lading Act, 1856 also every consignee of goods named in a
bill of lading and every endorsee of a bill of lading to
whom the property in goods therein mentioned shall pass,
upon or by reason of such consignment or endorsement, shall
have transferred to and vested in him all rights of suit,
and be subject to the same liabilities in respect of such
goods as if the contract contained in the bill of lading had
been made with himself.
The bill of lading is the symbol of the goods, and the
right to possess those passes to the transferee of the bill
of lading. In other words, its transfer is symbolic of the
transfer of the goods themselves and until the goods have
been delivered, the delivery of the duly endorsed bill of
lading operates as between the transferor or transferee, and
all who claim through them, as a physical delivery of the
goods would do. The bill of lading is a negotiable instru-
ment in the sense of carrying with it the right to demand
and have possession of the goods described in it. It also
carries with it the rights and liabilities under the con-
tract, where the property in the goods also is transferred.
However, a bill of lading is not a negotiable instrument in
the strict sense of the transferee deriving better title
than the transferor. The transferee of a bill of lading gets
no better title than the transferor himself had. Mere pos-
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session of the bill of lading does not enable the holder to
sue a person at a place where the tranferor himself could
not have done. Where the negotiation of a bill of lading is
by the person who had a right to sue on it, mere possession
of it does not enable the holder to sue any person who was
not liable under it and not to sue another who was liable
under it to make good the claim. He cannot also sue at a
place not intended by the parties when intention has been
expressed.
It would also be relevant to consider whether English
courts would be likely to entertain the instant suit if
instituted in England in terms of the bills of lading so
that the first respondent is not likely to be without a
remedy.
Dicey & Morris in the Conflict of Laws 1 1th Ed. have
given the following general principles as to jurisdiction in
actions in personam:
894
"Rule 28, Sub-rule 4: The court may assume jurisdiction if,
in the action begun by the writ, the claim is brought to
enforce, rescind, dissolve, annul or otherwise affect a
contract, or to recover damages or obtain other relief in
respect of the breach of a contract, being (in either case)
a contract which
(i) was made in England, or
(ii) was made by or through an agent trading or residing in
England on behalf of a principal trading or residing out of
England, or
(iii) is by its terms or by implication governed by English
law, or
(iv) contains a term to the effect that the court shall have
jurisdiction to hear and determine any action in respect of
the contract."
Rule 34 deals with jurisdiction clauses and it says:
"(1) Where a contract provides that all disputes between the
parties are to be referred to the jurisdiction of the Eng-
lish courts, the court normally has jurisdiction to hear and
determine any action in respect thereof.
(2) Subject to clause (3) of this Rule, where a contract
provides that all disputes between the parties are to be
referred to the exclusive jurisdiction of a foreign tribu-
nal, the English court will stay proceedings (or, as the
case may be, refuse to give leave to serve the writ out of
the jurisdiction) instituted in England in breach of such
agreement, unless the plaintiff proves that it is just and
proper to allow them to continue.
(3) Where the case falls within the scope of the 1968 Con-
vention, unless the defendant submits to the jurisdiction,
the court has no jurisdiction to determine a dispute.
(a) if one or more of the parties is domiciled in a Con-
tracting State and the parties have agreed in accordance
with Article 17 of the 1968 Convention
895
that the courts of a Contracting State other than the United
Kingdom are to have jurisdiction to settle any such dispute;
or
(b) if none of the parties is domiciled in a Contracting
State and the parties have agreed in accordance with Article
17 of the 1968 Convention that the courts of a Contracting
State other than the United Kingdom are to have jurisdiction
to settle any such dispute and the courts chosen have not
declined jurisdiction."
According to the authors the parties to a contract in
international trade or commerce may agree in advance on the
forum which is to have jurisdiction to determine disputes
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which may arise between them. The chosen court may be a
court in the country of one or both the parties, or it may
be a neutral forum. The jurisdiction clause may provide for
a submission to the courts of a particular country, or to a
court identified by a formula in a printed standard form,
such as a bill of lading referring disputes to the courts of
the carrier’s principal place of business. It is a question
of interpretation, governed by the proper law of the con-
tract, whether a jurisdiction clause is exclusive or non-
exclusive, or whether the claim which is the subject matter
of the action fails within its terms. If there is no express
choice of the proper law of the con.tract, the law of the
country of the chosen court will usually, but not invaria-
bly, be the proper law.
It is accordingly unlikely that the first respondent
would be without any remedy if the terms of clause 3 of the
bills of lading are faithfully observed.
The question of jurisdiction in this case ought not ,to
be determined by the High Court on the basis of the provi-
sions of s. 28 of the Indian Contract Act in the absence of
a specific provision making it applicable to transactions in
international trade. The effective operation of statutes of
a country in relation to foreigners and foreign property,
including ships, is subject to limitations..In general, a
statute extends territorially, unless the contrary is stat-
ed, throughout the country and will extend to the territori-
al waters, and such places as intention to that effect is
shown. A statute extends to all persons within the country
if that intention is shown. The Indian Parliament therefore
has no authority to legislate for foreign vessels or for-
eigners in them on the high seas. Thus a foreign ship on the
high seas, or her foreign owners or their agents in a for-
eign country, are not deprived of
896
rights by our statutory enactment expressed in general terms
unless it provides that a foreign ship entering an Indian
port or territorial waters and thus coming within the terri-
torial jurisdiction is to be covered. If the Parliament
legislates in terms which extend to foreign ships or for-
eigners beyond the territorial limits of its jurisdiction,
the Indian court is of course bound to give effect to such
enactment. However, no such provision has been referred to
in the impugned judgments. Without anything more Indian
statutes are ineffective against foreign property and for-
eigners outside the jurisdiction.
The Privy Council in Sirdar Gurdyal Singh v. Rajah of
Faridkote, [1894] AC 670 (684) decided that no territorial
legislation can give jurisdiction in personal action which
any foreign court should recognize against absent foreigners
owing no allegiance or obedience .to the power which so
legislates. Lore Selborne said: "In a personal action to
which none of these causes of jurisdiction apply, a decree
pronounced in absentem by a foreign court, to the jurisdic-
tion of which the defendant has not in any way submitted
himself, is by international law an absolute nullity. He is
under no obligation of any kind to obey it; and it must be
regarded as a mere nullity by the courts of every nation
except (when authorised by special local legislation) in the
country of the forum by which it was pronounced." There may
however be submission to the .jurisdiction of an Indian
court by litigating in India. The question then is what
would amount to submission to jurisdiction.
Cheshire & North’s Private International Law 11th Ed.,
on submission to jurisdiction says: "Despite the fundamental
principle that the court cannot entertain an action against
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a defendant who is absent from England, it has long been
recognised that an absent defendant may confer jurisdiction
on the court by submitting to it. This may be done in a
variety of ways, such as by the defendant acknowledging
service before actual service of the writ, or instructing a
solicitor to accept service on his behalf; Commencing an
action as a plaintiff will give the court jurisdiction over
a counter claim. Although a defendant who appears and con-
tests the case on its merits will be held to have submitted
to the jurisdiction, an appearance merely to protest that
the court does not have jurisdiction will not constitute
submission, even if I the defendant also seeks a stay of
proceedings pending the outcome of proceedings abroad." The
authors go on to say that any person may contract, either
expressly or impliedly, to submit to the jurisdiction of a
court to which he would not otherwise be subject. In case of
an international contract it is common practice for the par-
ties, to agree that
897
any dispute arising between them shall be settled by the
courts of another country even though both the parties are
not resident of that country. In such a case having consent-
ed to the jurisdiction one cannot afterwards contest the
binding effect of the judgment. The defendant out of the
jurisdiction of the country may be deemed to have been
served by service on his agent within the jurisdiction.
However, parties cannot by submission confer jurisdiction on
the court to entertain proceedings beyond its authority.
The jurisdiction of the court may be decided upon by the
parties themselves on basis of various connecting factors.
Wastlake says in his Treatise on Private International
Law, at page 5: "The principal grounds for selecting a
particular national jurisdiction in which to bring an action
are that the subject of the action, if a thing, is situate,
if a contract, was made, or was to be performed, if a de-
lict, was committed, within the territory: hence the forum
situs, or rei sitae, contractus, delicti, the two latter of
which are classed together as the forum special obligatio-
nis. Or that the jurisdiction is that in which all the
claims relating to a certain thing or group of things ought
to be adjudicated on together, the forum concursus, or that
to which the defendant is personally subject, the forum
rei."
In the instant case the appellant submits that as de-
fendant it appeared before the Indian court to protest its
jurisdiction and put forth its defences subject to that
protest. The appellant, it has been stated in para 2 of the
judgment under appeal, dated 30.4.1973, had not filed any
objection to the findings as to damages. Did it then amount
to submitting to the jurisdiction of the Indian court in
which the shipper or the first respondent had no right to
sue?
In Williams & Glyn’s Bank PLC v. Astro Dinamico Compania
Naviera S.A. & Anr., The Weekly Law Reports Vol. (1) 1984-
438, where the plaintiff-bank sought to enforce its securi-
ties against the defendants by instituting proceedings in
England in reliance of clause 7 of the guarantees, whereby
each of the defendants were expressed to submit irrevocably
to the jurisdiction of the English courts. The respondents
(defendants) made an application disputing the jurisdiction
of the English courts and had also simultaneously applied
for stay of the action. It was contended on behalf of the
appellants (plaintiffs) that the respondents (defendants)
either had waived any objection to the jurisdiction because
they had taken a step in the action by applying for a stay
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or that they would waive any objection if they persisted
with
898
their application in priority to disputing the jurisdiction.
Lord Fraser observed that it would surely be quite unrealis-
tic to say that the respondents had waived their objection
to the jurisdiction by applying for a stay as an alternative
in the very summons in which they applied for an order
giving effect to their objection to the jurisdiction. That
the summons made it abundantly clear that they were object-
ing and the fact that they asked for a decision upon their
objection to be postponed until the outcome of the Greek
proceedings was known, was not in any way inconsistent with
maintaining their objection. There was no reason in princi-
ple or in common sense why the respondents should not be
entitled to say: "We object to the jurisdiction of the
English courts, but we ask for the proceedings necessary to
decide that and the other issues to be stayed pending the
decision of the proceedings in Greece." Reference was made
to Rein v. Stein, [1892] 66 LT 469, where it was said at
page 471: "It seems to me that, in order to establish a
waiver, you must show that the party alleged to have waived
his objection has taken some step which is only necessary or
only useful if the objection has been actually waived, or if
the objection has never been entertained at all." In Dulles’
Settlement (No.2) ( 1951) Ch. 842; the question was whether
a father, who was an American resident outside England, had
submitted to the jurisdiction of the English courts in a
dispute about payment of maintenance to his child in Eng-
land. He had been represented by counsel in the English
court, who argued that he was not subject to their jurisdic-
tion. Denning LJ (as he then was) said at page 850:
"I cannot see how anyone can fairly say that a man has
voluntarily submitted to the jurisdiction of a court, when
he has all the time been vigorously protesting that it has
no jurisdiction. If he does nothing and lets judgment go
against him in default of appearance, he clearly does not
submit to the jurisdiction. What difference in principle
does it make, if he does not merely do nothing, but actually
goes to the court and protests that it has no jurisdiction?
I can see no distinction at all."
The judgment of the court of appeal which held that the
application for a stay involved assumption that the court
had jurisdiction to entertain the action and therefore the
question of jurisdiction must be decided first, was set
aside in appeal, and the appeal therefrom was dismissed by
the House of Lords.
In the instant case the question is of initial jurisdiction
on the
899
basis of claues 3 of the bills of lading. We have to ask the
question whether the shipper could or could not have the
right to sue at Cochin under the bills of lading. If he
could not have done so, the appellant’s appearance to pro-
test about jurisdiction would not cure that defect of juris-
diction. However, we find that in the Memo. of appeal before
the lower appellate court no specific ground as to jurisdic-
tion was taken through there were grounds on non-maintain-
ability of the suit. Even in the Special Leave Petition
before this Court no ground of lack of jurisdiction of the
courts below has been taken. We are, therefore, of the view
that the appellant has to be held to have either waived the
objection as to jurisdiction or to have submitted to the
jurisdiction in the facts and circumstances of the case. The
defence that the suit was not maintainable in the absence of
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the owner of the ship could in a sense be said to have been
on the merits of the case. The submission as to lack of
jurisdiction is, therefore, rejected.
Clause 3 of the bills of lading also contains the selec-
tion of law made by the parties. The contract is governed by
English law and disputes are to be determined according to
English Law. Is the selection of law binding? In Cheshire &
North’s Private International Law 1 th Ed., page 495,, while
discussing about the interpretation of contracts the authors
say: "When the stage has been reached where an obligation,
formally and essentially valid and binding on parties of
full capacity, has been created, then in the further matters
that may require the intervention of the Court, there is,
speaking generally, no reason in principle why the parties
should not be free to select the governing law." The express
choice of law made by parties obviates need for
interpretation.
In the absence of an express choice the question of the
proper law of contract would arise. The parties to a con-
tract should be bound by the jurisdiction clause to which
they have agreed unless there is some strong reason to the
contrary.
Dicey & Morris in the Conflict of Laws formulate the
following rule on proper law of contract as Rule 180:
"The term "Proper law of a contract" means the system of law
by which the parties intended the contract to be governed,
or, where their intention is neither expressed nor to be
inferred from the circumstances, the system of law with
which the transaction has its closest and most real connec-
tion."
900
Sub-rule 1:
"When the intention of the parties to a contract, as to the
law governing the contract, is expressed in words, this
expressed intention, in general, determines the proper law
of the contract."
Sub-rule 2:
"When the intention of the parties to a contract with regard
to the law governing the contract is not expressed in words,
their intention is to be inferred from the terms and nature
of the contract, and from the general circumstances of the
case, and such inferred intention determines the proper law
of the contract ."
There can, therefore, be no doubt that the instant contract
of affreightment evidenced by the bills of lading will be
governed by English law. As the law has been chosen, the
proper law will be the domestic law of England and the
proper law must be the law at the time when the contract is
made throughout the life of the contract and there cannot be
a "floating" proper law. It has been recognised since Gienar
v. Meyer, [1796] 2 Hy B 1608, that the the time of making
the contract the parties may expressly select the law by
which it is to be governed and they may declare their common
intention by a simple statement that the contract shall be
governed by the .law of a particular country. This has been
settled by a long line of decisions, as ’Rex v. Internation-
al Trustee for the Protection of Bondholders AG, [1937] AC
500 (529); Vita Food Products Inc. v. Unus Shipping Co.
Ltd., [1939] AC 277 (289-90); James Miller and Partners Ltd.
v. Whitworth Street Estates (Manchester) Ltd., [1970] AC 583
(603); Mackender v. Feldia AG, [1966] 3 All E.R. 847; Com-
pagnie d’ Armement Maritime SA v. Compagnie Tunisienne de
Navigation SA, [1971] AC 572: [1970] 3 All E.R. 71 and Acrow
(Automation) Ltd. v. Rex Chainbelt Inc., [1971] 3 All E.R.
1175.
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It is true that in English law there are certain limita-
tions on freedom to choose the governing law. The choice
must be bona fide and legal, and not against public policy.
It may not be permissible to choose a wholly unconnected law
which is not otherwise a proper law of contract. English
courts, it has been said, should, and do, have a residual
power to strike down for good reasons, choice of law
clauses, totally unconnected with the contract. Where there
is no express
901
choice of the proper law, it is open to Court to determine
whether there is an implied or inferred choice of law in the
parties contract.
The next question to be decided is whether the appellant
would be liable for the suit claim. This would naturally
depend on the contract of affreightment. It is an accepted
principle that the bill of lading is not the contract of
affreightment, for that has been made before the bill of
lading was signed and delivered, but it evidences the terms
of that contract. The bill of lading serves as a receipt and
also as a document of tittle and may be transferred by
endorsement and delivery. Article III(3) of the Hague Rules
says that a bill of lading is prima facie evidence of the
receipt by the carrier of the goods described therein. The
Hamburg Rules define a bill of lading under Article 1(7) as
follows:
"Bill of lading" means a document which evidences a contract
of carriage by sea and the taking over or loading of the
goods by the carrier, and by which the carrier undertakes to
deliver the goods against surrender of the document. A
provision in the document that the goods are to be delivered
to the order of a named person, or to order, or to bearer,
constitutes such an undertaking."
The Hague Rules say that after the goods are taken into
his charge, the carrier or his agent shall issue to the
shipper, if he so demands, a bill of lading, showing among
other things the particulars of the goods.
The contract of affreightment need not necessarily be
expressed in writing. The bill of lading is evidence of the
terms of the contract which can also be ascertained from the
charterparty where one exists. Dr. Justice T. Kochu Thommen
in his book of Bills of Lading in International Law and
Practice at page 25 writes:
"As between the shipowner and the shipper, the bill of
lading is not conclusive evidence of the terms of the con-
tract and parties to the contract are entitled to prove that
the stipulations in the bill of lading are at variance with
the agreed terms of the contract, as expressed or evidenced
in other documents. In practice, however, the terms of the
bill of lading govern the contractual relations between the
shipowner and the shipper, and the booking note generally
states that the carrier’s regular forms of bill of lading
shall
902
be used and all the terms thereof shall form part of the
contract. The bill of lading assumes the character of con-
clusive evidence once it has passed into the hands of a
consignee or indorsee and evidence may not be given which
varies or contradicts it. The position is, however, differ-
ent when the ship is under charter and stipulations in the
charterparty are expressly and clearly incorporated in the
bill of lading. In such a case the bill of lading, even
after it has passed in to the hands of a consignee or indor-
see, has to be read subject to the charterparty stipula-
tions. In the hands of a charterer, the bill of lading is
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only a receipt and the charterparty is the governing docu-
ment as far as the shipowner’ and the charterer are con-
cerned."
Apart from the question of the charterparty having been
proved or not according to law the question in the instant
case is whether clause 4 of the charterparty as to responsi-
bility of the shipowner in respect of the goods carried
would form part of or be incorporated in the bills of lad-
ing. How far the charterparty clauses laying down the re-
sponsibility and liabilities between the charterer and the
shipowner can be attributed to the consignee under the bill
of lading? It is an accepted principle that if certain
clauses of the charterparty are referred to in the bill of
lading those should be referred to in specific terms so as
to bind the shipper and the consignee. A general reference
may not be sufficient under all circumstances. Thus in T.W.
Thomas & Co. Ltd. v. Portsea Steamship Co. Ltd., [1912] AC 1
in the bill of lading there was also a marginal clause in
writing as follows:
"Deck load at shipper’s risk, and all other terms and condi-
tions and exceptions of charter to be as per charterparty,
including negligence clause."
The question was whether the arbitration clause in the
charter˜ party was incorporated by the reference in the bill
of lading. Lord Loreburn L.C. answering this question wheth-
er an arbitration clause found in the charterparty was
applicable to the contract evidenced by the bill of lading,
and to disputes arising between the shipowners and the
holders of the bill of lading under that document, replied
in the negative. Lord Atkinson observed that when it was
sought to introduce into a document like a bill of lading--a
negotiable instrument--a clause such as the arbitration
clause, not germane to the receipt, carriage, or delivery of
the cargo or the payment of freight, the proper subject
matters with which the bill of lading is conversant, that
should
903
be done by distinct and specific words, and not by such
general words as those written in the margin of the bill of
lading in that case.
In Vita Food Products, Incorporated v. Unus Shipping Co.
Ltd., [1939] A.C. 277, the bill of lading set out in detail
the terms and conditions of the contract "which are hereby
mutually agreed upon as follows". Clause 7 contained a
general exemption in respect of the goods carried from
liability for all damage capable of being covered by insur-
ance and from liability above a certain value per package
unless a special declaration was made. The same clause also
provided that "these contracts have been governed by English
Law." While determining what was the proper law of the
contract the Privy Council held that the expressed words of
the bill of lading must receive effect with the result that
the contract was governed by English Law. It was said: "It
is now well settled that by English Law (and the law of Nova
Scotia is the same) the proper law of the contract is the
law which the parties intended to apply. That intention is
objectively ascertained, and, if not expressed, will be
presumed from the terms of the contract and the relevant
surrounding circumstances." In that case the goods were
shipped in Newfoundland under bills of lading which did not
contain the statement required by section 3 of the Carriage
of Goods by Sea Act, 1932 which incorporated the Hague rules
subject to certain modifications but the bill of lading
contained a general clause that the contracts "shall be
governed by English Law" and applying that law the Shipowner
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was held to be within the exceptions which exempted him from
liability. In Rex v.International Trustee for the protection
of Bondholders, [1937] AC 500, it was held that the inten-
tion of the parties would be ascertained from what is ex-
pressed in the contract, which will be conclusive. Repelling
the contention that the transaction which was one relating
to the carriage on a Nova Scotian ship of goods from New-
foundland to New York between residents in those countries,
contained nothing to connect it in any way with English law,
and that choice could not be seriously taken, their Lord-
ships held that connection with English law was not as a
matter of principle essential.
The Indian Bills of Lading Act, 1856, which is based on
the Bills of Lading Act of 1855 of England in its preamble
says:
"Whereas by the custom of merchants a bill of lading of
goods being transferable by endorsement, the property in the
goods may thereby pass to the indorsee, but nevertheless all
rights in respect of the contract contained in the bill of
lading continue in the original shipper or owner, and it is
904
expedient that such rights should pass with the property."
Section 1 of the Act provides that fights under bills of
lading are to vest in consignee or endorsee. It says: "Every
consignee of goods named in a bill of lading and every
endorsee of a bill of lading to whom the property in the
goods therein mentioned shall pass, upon or by reason of
such consignment or endorsement, shall have transferred to
and vested in him all rights of suit, and be subject to the
same liabilities in respect of such goods as if the contract
contained in the bill of lading had been made with himself."
Thus a bill of lading is intended to provide for the rights
and liabilities of the parties arising out of the contract
of affreightment. If the consignee claims the goods under a
bill of lading he is bound by its terms. The property in the
cargo passes to the consignee or the endorsee of the bill of
lading but the contract whereunder the consignment or en-
dorsement is made has always to be taken into consideration.
Thus the consignee or an endorsee gets only such rights as
its consignor or endorser had in respect of the goods men-
tioned in the bill of lading. This is in conformity with
Private International law applicable to the case.
The Indian Carriage of Goods by Sea Act, 1925 (Act XXVI
of 1925) is an Act to amend the law with respect to carriage
of goods by sea. It was passed after accepting the recommen-
dations of the International Conference on maritime Law held
at Brussels in October, 1922 and accepting the rules con-
tained in the Draft Convention held at Brussels meeting in
October, 1923 amending the rules to give the rules the force
of law with a view to establish the responsibilities, li-
abilities, rights and amenities attaching to carriers on the
bills of lading. But the Rules of the act are not applicable
to this case.
The High Court rejected the contention of the appellant
that it could not be made personally liable for claim on the
grounds that the bills of lading were issued in the printed
forms of the appellant company bearing its name at the top
and that beyond what appeared at the bottom over the signa-
ture and seal, there was nothing at all to indicate that the
appellant company was issuing the bills of lading for and on
behalf of any owners of the vessel. However, the conditions
printed on the reverse of the bills of lading itself could
not have been avoided. Clause 4 Agency Clause said:
"If the vessel is not owned by or chartered by demise to the
company or Line by whom this bill of lading is issued (as
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may be the case notwithstanding anything that appears to
905
the contrary) this bill of lading shall take effect only as
a contract with the owner or demise chatterers as the case
may be as principal made through the agency of the said
company or Line who act solely as agents and shall be under
no personal liability whatsoever in respect thereon."
This clause ex facie establishes a privity of contract
between the owner or demise charterer of the vessel on the
one hand and the shipper to whom the bill of lading has been
issued by the appellant company as the charterer otherwise
than by demise. The High Court construed this clause to be
one relieving or lessening the carrier’s liability without
considering whether it was otherwise than as provided in the
Rules under the Carriage of Goods Act, 1924 of England.
In Halsbury’s Laws of England 4th edn. Vol. 43, para 401, it
is said.
"A contract for the carnage of goods in a ship is called
in law a contract of affreightment. In practice these con-
tracts are usually written and most frequently are expressed
in one or other of two types of document called respectively
a charterparty and a bill of lading." In para 402 we read
that a contract by charterparty is a contract by which an
entire ship or some principal part of her is let to a mer-
chant, called ’the charterer’, for the conveyance of goods
on a determined voyage to one or more places, or until the
expiration of a specified period. In the first case it is
called a "voyage charterparty", and in the second a "time
charterparty". Such a contract may operate as a demise of
the ship herself, to which the services of the master and
the crew may or may not be added, or it may confer on the
charterer nothing more than the right to have his goods
conveyed by a particular ship, and, as subsidiary to it, to
have the use of the ship and the services of the master and
crew.
Thus for the purposes of ascertaining the responsibili-
ty of a charterer in respect of the cargo shipped and land-
ed, it would be necessary to know not only the stipulations
between the shipper i.e. the owner of the cargo and the
charterer, evidenced by the bill of lading and also those
between the charterer and the owner of the ship. If the
charter is by way of demise the problem would be simple
inasmuch as the bill of lading will be purely between the
shipper and the charterer. In cases of a ’voyage charter’ or
a ’time charter’ one has to find out the actual terms of the
charter to ascertain whether they operated as charter by
demise or made the charterer only as an agent
906
of the shipowner and if so to what extent so as to ascertain
the extent of privity established between the shipper, and
the shipowner as stipulated in the bill of lading.
Charterparties by way of demise, says Halsbury, at para
403, are of two kinds: "(1) charter without master or crew,
or "bareboat charter", where the hull is the subject matter
of the charterparty and (2) charter with master and crew,
under which the ship passes to the charterer in a state fit
for the purposes of mercantile adventure. In both cases the
charterer becomes for the time being the owner of the ship;
the master and crew are, or become to all intents and pur-
poses, his employees, and through them the possession of the
ship is in him. The owner, on the other hand, has divested
himself of all control either over the ship or over the
master and crew, his sole fight being to receive the stipu-
lated hire and to take back the ship when the charterparty
comes to an end. During the currency of the charterparty,
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therefore, the owner is under no liability to third persons
whose goods may have been conveyed upon the demised ship or
who may have done work or supplied stores for her, and those
persons must look only to the charterer who has taken his
place."
In para 404 Halsbury said:
"Although a charterparty which does not operate as a demise
confers on the charterer the temporary right to have his
goods loaded and conveyed in the ship, the ownership remains
in the original owner, and through the master and crew, who
continue to be his employees, the possession of the ship
also remains in him. Therefore, the existence of the char-
terparty does not necessarily divest the owner of liability
to third persons whose goods may have been conveyed on the
ship, nor does it deprive him of his rights as Owners."
Whether a charterparty operates as a demise or not
depends on the stipulations of the charterparty. The princi-
pal test is whether the master is the employee of the owner
or of the charterer. In other words where the master becomes
the employee of the charterer or continues to be the owner’s
employee. Where the charterparty is by way of demise, the
charterer may employ the ship in carrying either his own
goods or those of others. Where the charterparty does not
operate as a demise, the charterer’s right vis-a-vis the
owner depends upon the terms of the contract. "The contract
of carnage is personal to the
907
charterer, and he cannot call upon the shipowner to under-
take liabilities to third persons or transfer to third
persons his own liabilities to the shipowner unless the
contract so provides." A charterparty has to be construed so
as to give effect, as far as possible, to the intention of
the parties as expressed in the written contract. The stipu-
lations of charterparty may be incorporated in a bill of
lading so that they are thereby binding on the parties. It
is an accepted principle that when stipulations of the
charterparty are expressly incorporated, they become terms
of the contract contained in the bill of lading, and they
can be enforced by or against the shipper, consignee or
endorsee. The effect of a bill of lading depends upon the
circumstances of the particular case, of which the most
important is the position of the shipper and of the holder.
Where there is a bill of lading relating to the goods, the
terms of the contract on which the goods are carried are
prima facie to be ascertained from the bill of lading.
However, if a shipper chose to receive a bill of lading in a
certain from without protest he should ordinarily be bound
by it. Thus, it cannot be said that the bill of lading is
not conclusive evidence of its terms and the person execut-
ing it is not necessarily bound by all its stipulations,
unless he repudiates them on the ground that, as he did not
know, and could not reasonably be expected to know, of their
existence, his assent to them is not to be inferred from his
acceptance of the bill of lading without objection. Where
there is a charterparty, the bill of lading is prima facie,
as between the shipowner and an indorsee, the contract on
which the goods are carried. This is so when the indorsee is
ignorant of the terms of the charterparty, and may be so
even if he knows of them. As between the shipowner and the
charterer the bill of lading may in some cases have the
effect of modifying the contract as contained in the char-
terparty, although, in general, the charterparty will pre-
vail and the bill of lading will operate solely as an ac-
knowledgement of receipt.
In the instant case we find from Exts. P 1 to P3 that
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the following has been prominently printed just below the
signature ’For the Master and Owners’ in the bills of lad-
ing. SEE CONDITIONS OF CARRIAGE AND OTHER CONDITIONS OF
REVERSE. It can not therefore be said that the shipper,
whose knowledge will be attributed to the first respondent
did not know of the conditions of carriage printed on the
reverse , there being no other conditions printed elsewhere
in the bills of lading.
None of the parties having repudiated the bills of
lading in this case, the High Court ought not to have ac-
cepted the submission of .the first respondent that clause 4
of the bills of lading offended the provisions of the Car-
riage of Goods by Sea Act, 1924 and therefore bad.
908
The Carriage of Goods by Sea Act, of 1924 of England was on
the Hague Rules which were amended by Brussels protocol 1968
which is now embodied in the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act
1971 which came into force in 1977. The Indian Carriage of
Goods by Sea Act 1925 (Act XXVI of 1925) which is an Act to
amend the law with respect to the carriage of goods by sea
was passed after the International Conference on Maritime
Law held at Brussels in October 1922 and Brussels meeting in
October 1923. Under Section 2 of that Act which deals with
application of rules it is provided: "Subject to the provi-
sions of this Act, the rules set out in the Schedule (here-
inafter referred to as "the Rules") shall have the effect in
relation to and in connection with the carriage of goods by
sea in ships carrying goods from any port in India to any
other port whether in or outside India." To apply the Rules
to a case, the port of origin has to be an Indian Port.
Unless the starting point or the port of loading is a port
in India the Rules are inapplicable. These Rules have no
application when goods are not carried from any Indian port.
As in the instant case goods were shipped in Africa and
carried to Cochin, this Act obviously was not applicable.
There is nothing to show that the charterparty was by
way of demise. Pacta dant legem contractui--the stipulations
of parties constitute the law of the contract. Agreements
give the law to the contract. Clause 4 having been a stipu-
lation in the contract evidenced by the bills of lading the
parties could not resile therefrom. It is not clear whether
the English Carriage of goods by Sea Act, 1924 or the Indian
Carriage of Goods Act 1925 was applied by the High Court.
The Articles and the Rules referred to are to be found in
the Schedule to the Indian Act the Rules whereunder were not
applicable to the facts of the case. The dispute could not
have been decided partly according to municipal law and
partly according to English law. The English law was not
proved before the court according to law.
The result is that this appeal must succeed. We
accordingly allow this appeal, set aside the impugned
judgments and remand the case to the trial court for
disposal according to law after giving opportunity to the
parties to amend their pleadings and adduce additional
evidence, if they are so advised, in light of the
observations made hereinabove. In the facts and
circumstances of the case we make no order as to costs.
R.S.S. Appeal
allowed.
909